Communities and Connections
Essays in Honour of Barry Cunliffe
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A beszerzés időigényét az eddigi tapasztalatokra alapozva adjuk meg. Azért becsült, mert a terméket külföldről hozzuk be, így a kiadó kiszolgálásának pillanatnyi gyorsaságától is függ. A megadottnál gyorsabb és lassabb szállítás is elképzelhető, de mindent megteszünk, hogy Ön a lehető leghamarabb jusson hozzá a termékhez.
A termék adatai:
- Kiadó OUP Oxford
- Megjelenés dátuma 2007. november 8.
- ISBN 9780199230341
- Kötéstípus Keménykötés
- Terjedelem528 oldal
- Méret 241x164x30 mm
- Súly 1047 g
- Nyelv angol
- Illusztrációk 142 in-text illustrations 0
Kategóriák
Rövid leírás:
A collection of essays by many of the leading specialists in the archaeology of the Iron Age and early Roman periods in Britain and western Europe, paying tribute to Professor Sir Barry Cunliffe. The subjects covered range over more than a thousand years, and from the Atlantic coasts to the eastern Mediterranean.
TöbbHosszú leírás:
For almost forty years the study of the Iron Age in Britain has been dominated by Professor Sir Barry Cunliffe. Between the 1960s and 1980s he led a series of large-scale excavations at famous sites including the Roman baths at Bath, Fishbourne Roman palace, and Danebury hillfort which revolutionized our understanding of Iron Age society, and the interaction between this world of 'barbarians' and the classical civilizations of the Mediterranean. His standard text on Iron Age Communities in Britain is in its fourth edition, and he has published groundbreaking volumes of synthesis on The Ancient Celts (OUP, 1997) and on the peoples of the Atlantic coast, Facing the Ocean (OUP, 2001). This volume brings together papers from more than thirty of Professor Cunliffe's colleagues and students to mark his retirement from the Chair of European Archaeology at the University of Oxford, a post which he has held since 1972. The breadth of the contributions, extending over 800 years and ranging from the Atlantic fringes to the eastern Mediterranean, is testimony to Barry Cunliffe's own extraordinarily wide interests.
TöbbTartalomjegyzék:
I. Travellers, Coastal Trade, and Exploration
Sailing to the Britannic Isles: some Mediterranean perspectives on the remote North-West from the sixth century BC to the seventh century AD
Home truths from travellers' tales: on the transmission of culture in the European Iron Age
Questions of context: a Greek cup from the River Thames
Pre-Roman Iron Age boats and rocks in the North: reality and reflection
Coasting Britannia: Roman trade and traffic around the shores of Britain
The production technology of, and trade in, Egyptian Blue pigment in the Roman world
II. `On the Edge'. At the Fringes of Europe
Cores and peripheries revisited: the mining landscapes of Wadi Faynan (southern Jordan) 5000 BC-AD 700
Where were North African nundinae held?
A feast of Beltain? Reflections on the rich Danebury harvests
A reassessment of the enclosure at Lugg, County Dublin, Ireland
The Late Castro culture of north-west Portugal: dynamics of change
III. The Celtic Heartlands
From Austria to Arras: the gold armlets from Grave 115, Mannersdorf a.d. Leitha, Lower Austria
Bourges in the earlier Iron Age: an interim view
British potins abroad: a new find from central France and the Iron Age in south-east England
Mapping Celticity, mapping Celticization
Druids: towards an archaeology
IV. Lanscapes and Society in Iron Age and Roman Britain
Sculpture as landscape: archaeology and the Englishness of Henry Moore
Wessex hillforts after Danebury: exploring boundaries
A new Gallo-Belgic B coin die from Hampshire
Evidence of absence? The rarity of gold in Durotrigan Iron Age coinage
Meme Machines and the mills of the imagination: science and supposition in archaeological enquiry
`How dare they leave all this unexcavated!' Continuing to discover Roman Bath
Decoration and demon traps: the meanings of geometric borders in Roman mosaics
`The race that is set before us': the athletic ideal in the aesthetics and culture of early Roman Britain
Barry Cunliffe: an interim bibliography